Wednesday, 26 August 2020 Climate awareness champion supports ‘Fight For Our Reef’ campaign with oOh!media A new campaign to help protect the Great Barrier Reef has gone live, driven by climate awareness champion Charlotte Berry’s commitment to a better world. Charlotte, who is also a senior strategist at media agency UM, won the ‘Impact’ sustainability category at last year’s $1 million oOh!media Open Awards, which recognise four industry individuals who make significant community contributions. Her prize was $250,000 in media spend to promote a cause of her choice across oOh!’s Out of Home network, which she donated to the Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS). The AMCS’s ‘Fight For Our Reef’ campaign aims to combat the damage being done to the Great Barrier Reef by channelling public concern into calling for greater leadership on the issue by politicians. Speaking on the worthiness of the campaign, Charlotte said the fight for the Great Barrier Reef was extremely important. “There are so many worthy environmental causes, but I firmly believe in acting to save the Great Barrier Reef before it’s too late. The Reef is not only an Australian icon, but a living wonder and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Our generation can no longer be complacent, we must not let our legacy be a decimated Great Barrier Reef,” she stated. “AMCS has been doing a great job calling on all our leaders to step up, but time is running out. Any extra support that can go to this cause will help, and the extra media space provided by oOh! will help the AMCS reach its goals.” The two-week campaign commenced in mid-August across digital road and retail assets in NSW, ACT, Queensland and Victoria. The Fight For Our Reef Campaign is the second from the Open Awards to run on oOh!’s networks. In February, Aftershock kicked off a campaign in Melbourne to support Teresa’s Trotters’ walk at the Botanical Gardens, raising funds and awareness for high mortality rate cancers. A campaign for Cystic Fibrosis Community Care is expected to run before the end of the year, while the campaign for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Fund will run in 2021 to mark the organisation’s 100th anniversary. Previous Article oOh!media takes green approach to global OOH campaign Next Article IDC tracker shows signs of recovery for large format and industrial print shipments in Asia Pacific If you have a news story, or story about an interesting project or installation please contact [email protected] Sign up to Image Magazine Newsletter. Print